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WHY WE CHOOSE THIS MOVIE?

Life of Pi is a movie based on the best-selling novel by Yann Martel. Life of pi was fascinate with the beauty of the visual display. Besides the visual beauty that is owned, other advantages of this film lies in the spiritual message it carries, as well as how this movie brings the message. God's existence, which presented so beautifully and without being patronizing. This movie make so many people around the world believe in God.

THE CHARACTERS
1. Piscine Molitor Patel (Pi) - The protagonist of the story. Piscine is the narrator for most of the novel, and his account of his seven months at sea forms the bulk of the story. He gets his unusual name from the French word for pooland, more specifically, from a pool in Paris in which a close family friend, Francis Adirubasamy, loved to swim. A student of zoology and religion, Pi is deeply intrigued by the habits and characteristics of animals and people

2. Richard Parker - The Royal Bengal tiger with whom Pi shares his lifeboat. His captor, Richard Parker, named him Thirsty, but a shipping clerk made a mistake and reversed their names. From then on, at the Pondicherry Zoo, he was known as Richard Parker. Weighing 450 pounds and about nine feet long, he kills the hyena on the lifeboat and the blind cannibal. With Pi, however, Richard Parker acts as an omega, or submissive, animal, respecting Pis dominance.

PLOT
In an Authors Note, an anonymous author figure explains that he traveled from his home in Canada to India because he was feeling restless. There, while sipping coffee in a caf in the town of Pondicherry, he met an elderly man named Francis Adirubasamy who offered to tell him a story fantastic enough to give him faith in God. This story is that of Pi Patel. The author then shifts into the story itself, but not before telling his reader that the account will come across more naturally if he tells it in Pis own voice. Part One is narrated in the first person by Pi. Pi narrates from an advanced age, looking back at his earlier life as a high school and college student in Toronto, then even further back to his boyhood in Pondicherry. He explains that he has suffered intensely and found solace in religion and zoology. He describes how Francis Adirubasamy, a close business associate of his fathers and a competitive swimming champion, taught him to swim and bestowed upon him his unusual name. Pi is named after the Piscine Molitor, a Parisian swimming club with two pools that Adirubasamy used to frequent. We learn that Pis father once ran the Pondicherry Zoo, teaching Pi and his brother, Ravi, about the dangerous nature of animals by feeding a live goat to a tiger before their young eyes. Pi, brought up as a Hindu, discovers Christianity, then Islam, choosing to practice all three religions simultaneously. Motivated by Indias political strife, Pis parents decide to move the family to Canada; on June 21, 1977, they set sail in a cargo ship, along with a crew and many cages full of zoo creatures.

At the beginning of Part Two, the ship is beginning to sink. Pi clings to a lifeboat and encourages a tiger, Richard Parker, to join him. Then, realizing his mistake in bringing a wild animal aboard, Pi leaps into the ocean. The narrative jumps back in time as Pi describes the explosive noise and chaos of the sinking: crewmembers throw him into a lifeboat, where he soon finds himself alone with a zebra, an orangutan, and a hyena, all seemingly in shock. His family is gone. The storm subsides and Pi contemplates his difficult situation. The hyena kills the zebra and the orangutan, and thento Pis intense surpriseRichard Parker reveals himself: the tiger has been in the bottom of the lifeboat all along. Soon the tiger kills the hyena, and Pi and Richard Parker are alone together at sea. Pi subsists on canned water and filtered seawater, emergency rations, and freshly caught sea life. He also provides for the tiger, whom he masters and trains.

The days pass slowly and the lifeboats passengers coexist warily. During a bout of temporary blindness brought on by dehydration, Pi has a run-in with another blind castaway. The two discuss food and tether their boats to one another. When the blind man attacks Pi, intending to eat him, Richard Parker kills him. Not long after, the boat pulls up to a strange island of trees that grow directly out of vegetation, without any soil. Pi and Richard Parker stay here for a time, sleeping in their boat and exploring the island during the day. Pi discovers a huge colony of meerkats who sleep in the trees and freshwater ponds. One day, Pi finds human teeth in a trees fruit and comes to the conclusion that the island eats people. He and Richard Parker head back out to sea, finally washing ashore on a Mexican beach. Richard Parker runs off, and villagers take Pi to a hospital.

In Part Three, two officials from the Japanese Ministry of Transport interview Pi about his time at sea, hoping to shed light on the fate of the doomed ship. Pi tells the story as above, but it does not fully satisfy the skeptical men. So he tells it again, this time replacing the animals with humans: a ravenous cook instead of a hyena, a sailor instead of a zebra, and his mother instead of the orangutan. The officials note that the two stories match and that the second is far likelier. In their final report, they commend Pi for living so long with an adult tiger.

SYNOPSIS
FULL TITLE

Life of Pi

AUTHOR Yann Martel TYPE OF WORK Novel GENRE

Allegory; fable

LANGUAGE English TIME AND PLACE WRITTEN Researched in India DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION

and Canada and written in Canada in the late 1990s

2002

PUBLISHER Canongate Books Ltd.

NARRATOR Piscine Molitor Patel and the author, Yann Martel


POINT OF VIEW The prefatory Authors Note is written in first person by the author, who explains

how he came to hear the story we are about to read from Pi Patel himself. The account (Part One and Part Two) is told in first person by Pi. The final section of the book (Part Three) is written mainly as a transcript of a conversation between Pi and two officials, bookended by first-person comments from the author.

TENSE Past tense SETTING (TIME) The author tells Pis story from an undetermined SETTING (PLACE)

contemporary point, some years after the publication of his second book in1996. Pis ordeal begins on July 2, 1977, and continues for 227 days. Pis boyhood home in Pondicherry, India; the Pacific Ocean; Tomatln, Mexico; and, briefly, Toronto, Canada

POSITIVE
Life Of Pi must be the most beautiful film of the year, a technical marvel, and magic realism at its most magical. Anyone who has read Yann Martels Booker Prize-winning novel will know that it tells the story of an Indian teenager named Pi (Suraj Sharma) shipwrecked in a lifeboat with a ravenous Bengal tiger. This beautiful film demands serious attention, as it is about God and a search for God, and is clearly set up allegorically. It bring so many positive messages and role models. It was visually beautiful, and it is great to see modern movies exploring spiritual and religious themes. It was a stunning and thoughtful movie, and told a story to explore the nature of faith.

NEGATIVE
It isnt perfect. It does not fulfil its promise of making us believe in God; on the contrary, it reminds us more of human resilience, but over all this movie is good thanks in part to an extraordinary performance by the inexperienced leading actor.

MORAL VALUE
Believe in God, because He know the best way for you. Dont give up and always have a faith in your heart.

CONCLUSION
Life of Pi is a really great movie and had a lot of positive messages! So what are you waiting for?? Grab your popcorn and enjoy the movie

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